Kadin Savikataaq has been missing for a year and a half. Her family is still searching | CBC News


On the western coast of Hudson Bay, an unsolved mystery looms over the hamlet of Arviat, Nunavut, a fly-in community of about 3,200 people. 

What happened to Kadin Savikataaq? Where is she? Does anyone know?

Kadin went missing in Arviat in August 2024 after she went out for the night and never returned. The truck she’d been driving was later discovered submerged in Hudson Bay, but Kadin was never found and nobody has come forward with any information about what happened.

Kadin’s family is certain of one thing: she won’t be returning home. 

Kadin’s mother, Siuqpaat Copland, told CBC’s Unreserved that she is convinced foul play was involved. 

“In my heart, I know that she didn’t come home because something was done to her.

LISTEN | The community of Arviat renews its search for Kadin Savikataaq:

Unreserved49:42Keep saying her name: the search for Kadin Savikataaq


‘My Kadin’

Kadin was distinctive in that she had two sets of parents. 

Her birth parents, Siuqpaat and Dudley Copland, and her adoptive parents, Joe Savikataaq Jr. and Lillian Savikataaq, Siuqpaat’s sister. 

At the age of two or three, Copland says Kadin became attached to her aunt and uncle and grew up mostly at their house. 

When they legally adopted Kadin, her aunt and uncle kept her last name of Copland, but Kadin changed it to Savikataaq when she turned 19.

A man in an orange shirt and pilot's headset and a child in a pilot's headset look to the back of a small plane from the cockpit and smile.
Kadin and Joe Savikataaq Jr. fly a float plane. When she was young, Kadin grew extremely close to Savikataaq and his wife, Lillian, Kadin’s aunt. They would go on to legally adopt her. (Submitted by the Savikataaq family)

They shared a special bond, and she even followed in her uncle’s footsteps when she became a pilot. 

“I just called her my Kadin’naaq,” Joe said. “Like mine, my Kadin.” (The word Naaq in Inuktitut describes someone as being small, it can also mean to feel a sense of care.) 

The last visit

Siuqpaat Copland remembers the last time she saw her daughter.

Kadin had come for supper after working at the community’s cargo office, a job she picked up while waiting for a medical exam to get her commercial pilot’s licence. She already had a private pilot’s licence.

Kadin was one of Siuqpaat and Dudley Copland’s five children. Copland says her daughter was “a very outgoing, determined kid.”

A smiling young woman with long hair wears sunglasses and a pilot's headset as she sits in the cockpit of a small plane.
Kadin obtained her private pilot’s licence in November 2023 from Harv’s Air, a flying school in Steinback, Man. (Submitted by the Savikataaq and Copland families)

She says Kadin was always challenging herself by taking on things out of her comfort zone. “She liked doing big things, big dreams.”

Copland’s voice becomes a whisper as she recalls the last thing Kadin said to her: “Mom, I’m not sleeping at home.” 

Instead, Kadin told her she was going to stay with a friend.

At 10:15 p.m. on Aug. 19, 2024, Kadin left the house with Copland’s white truck for the last time.

Six people wearing different hockey jerseys stand on the shore of Hudson Bay
From left, Kadin’s parents Dudley and Siuqpaat Copland, her sisters Michaela Kablutsiak and Jaime Copland and her brothers Rayn Copland and Jon Copland pose in hockey jerseys. Hockey was a sport Kadin was passionate about. (Submitted by the Copland family)

Where’s Kadin?

Copland says she woke up in the middle of the night, worried about her daughter, so she texted her. She says Kadin told her she was still driving. When Kadin stopped replying to her messages, she started to worry.

The friend Kadin was supposed to be staying with was also worried. In the middle of the night, he went to Copland’s house to tell her that Kadin had called to ask for a ride home because she’d been drinking. He told Copland he heard at least two other men with Kadin when she called.

Together, they went looking for Kadin.

While driving, they saw ATV lights in the distance and headed toward The Point, what people in Arviat call Nuvuk, a stretch of land that leads to Hudson Bay during low tide. The area has no trees and is surrounded by bogs and marshlands. 

When they got closer to the ATVs, Copland stopped one of the drivers and asked what was going on. He told her there was a white truck in the water, that they’d tried to get to it, but that the tide was coming in.   

“That’s when I knew. It was Kadin.” Copland said, her voice lowering to a whisper. “It was our truck.”

A white truck on its side in the rocky shore near a large body of water
The truck Kadin was driving the night she disappeared was found on its side after the tide receded from Hudson Bay. (Submitted by Lillian Savikataaq)

Copland turned back to tell her family, but on the way, she says she came upon one of the men Kadin had reportedly been drinking with.

“So we stopped and said ‘Our truck’s in the water, where’s Kadin?’ But he wasn’t saying anything, so we just left him.”

‘I knew something was wrong’

Meanwhile, someone posted a photo of the submerged truck to Facebook that soon made its way to Joe.

“I knew something was wrong,” he said. “I quickly got up, called my dad and told him to get our boat ready.”

Joe Jr. is the mayor of Arviat, and at the time, his father, Joe Savikataaq Sr., was the premier of Nunavut.

By the time they arrived, the tide had come in, covering the truck under water. Joe says it was one of the hardest moments in his life, “seeing a truck like that, not knowing if she’s in there.” 

WATCH | Kadin’s truck found in Hudson Bay the night she went missing:

Kadin Savikataaq’s truck found submerged after she disappeared

Kadin Savikataaq of Arviat, Nunavut, went out one night in August 2024 and never returned. Soon after, in the early hours of Aug. 20, 2024, Kadin’s mother went looking for her. Instead, she found the truck Kadin had been driving on a slip of land just off the western coast of Hudson Bay, submerged by the incoming tide. Her adoptive father, Joe Savikataaq Jr., took this video of the truck being swallowed by the waves.

He says he used the boat anchor to break the window but couldn’t see inside because of the murky water.

“So I put my hand as far down as I could. I didn’t feel anything. I put my whole foot inside the vehicle trying to feel for anything, anything of Kadin or her body. There was nothing. She was not in there.”

Because The Point is a long reef, Joe says the truck had to be driven out there at low tide. 

He is certain that Kadin died that fateful night.

“I don’t know any details,” he said. “I’m sure I know there are people that do know but are not talking.”

The search

The search for Kadin started almost immediately. By morning, the whole community was involved. Joe says it was the biggest search effort he’s ever seen, involving ATVs, trucks, boats and even a helicopter.

“And I myself was flying an airplane, doing grids,” he said. “No matter where I flew, there was someone on a boat, someone walking, someone on an ATV.”

Despite these efforts, Joe says the search turned up “no evidence at all. Nothing.”

And yet, he says, Kadin has to be somewhere.

“You can’t just disappear. Someone has to do something to you in order to disappear like this.”

A white truck lies on its side on a rocky shoreline.
Kadin was driving her mother’s white truck the night she disappeared in August 2024. It was discovered late at night submerged in water on The Point or Nuvuk, a strip of land leading to Hudson Bay. (Nunavut RCMP)

The investigation

Nunavut RCMP’s Major Crimes Unit was called in to investigate.

In an email to Unreserved, RCMP said that the most likely cause of Kadin’s disappearance was drowning after a single motor vehicle collision.

The RCMP didn’t share the evidence collected during its investigation, but said it supports the theory that Kadin drowned. However, without her remains, the RCMP noted that a definitive conclusion about what happened to Kadin can’t be reached. 

Joe doesn’t agree with the RCMP’s theory that Kadin drowned.

“If the RCMP thinks she went in the water, those boats would have found her. If the boat would not have found her, that airplane would have found her,” he said.

“I personally even scuba dived in that area. If she was down in the water, I was hoping I would at least find her, but unfortunately, I couldn’t find her.”

In my opinion, they came to a conclusion way too quick.– Joe Savikataaq Jr., on the RCMP’s investigation

He and Copland also aren’t satisfied with the RCMP’s investigative efforts. Joe says only two members of the Major Crimes Unit were in the community for just two or three days.

“In my opinion, they came to a conclusion way too quick without knowing the facts or knowing anything that goes on in the area,” Joe said.

His suspicions grew when he recovered Kadin’s cellphone in the truck after the tide went out, something he said she’d never leave.

“There definitely is foul play involved for her circumstances to be the way they are.”

Kadin’s family believes she was murdered and that her body was buried.

A man in a uniform and a dog walk along a rocky shore.
For three days in June 2025, almost a year after Kadin disappeared, an RCMP scent detection dog and its handler visited the area where the truck she was driving was found. RCMP said their efforts were unsuccessful. (Submitted by the Savikataaq and Copland families)

Police dogs and a need for answers 

In June 2025, nearly a year after Kadin went missing, RCMP sent one police scent detection dog to the area where the truck was found.

Nunavut RCMP told CBC that a thorough investigation was conducted and that there was “no information to indicate criminality in Ms. Kadin Savikataaq’s disappearance.”

But her family is planning another search this summer, this time with the help of three scent detection dogs from a private company. 

Copland says people in Arviat told her there was a third man in the truck that night. 

She says she informed the RCMP about this, but said “nothing was moving.” So, in January 2025, she registered a complaint with the Civilian Review and Complaints Commission, the RCMP watchdog. 

A drone photo shows a large group of people forming a circle around a family on the shoreline next to a large body of water. A strip of land emerging from the water can be seen on the left.
People in Arviat gather for a memorial to honour Kadin a week after she disappeared in August 2024. The stretch of land called The Point or Nuvuk where the truck Kadin was driving ended up the night she went missing, is seen on the left. (Submitted by the Savikataaq and Copland families)

In it, she stated her concerns about Major Crimes spending just a few days on the ground to gather evidence, and asked why a police dog hadn’t been involved in the initial search. She also asked why RCMP aren’t saying more about the people Kadin was with that night.  

When the Commission is called upon, it requests a separate police service to review the investigation to determine if anything was missed. In an email to CBC News, the RCMP said it had selected the Calgary Police Service (CPS) to conduct the review.

A CPS spokesperson confirmed via email that Nunavut RCMP requested its assistance in January 2025, and said that its review of the case was completed in June 2025.

Though Copland was told the review was finished, she has yet to see it.

Chief Superintendent Kent Pike, Nunavut RCMP’s commanding officer, attempted to go to Arviat from Iqaluit in February to deliver the findings of Calgary’s review, but he was delayed due to a blizzard and the meeting was postponed.

Copland says a new time hasn’t been confirmed yet. 

A group of people in winter clothing holding signs that say Justice for Kadin walk down a snowy road.
Since Kadin disappeared, her friends in Arviat have been organizing Justice for Kadin walks as a way to raise awareness. (Juanita Issakiark)

‘Justice for Kadin’

One week after Kadin disappeared, the community of Arviat gathered at The Point for a memorial.

Since then, some of her friends, like Emily Kalujak, have organized rallies calling for justice. She says a lot of people turned out to support them despite some bad weather. 

“I’m grateful for that,” Kalujak said. “Grateful for my town, for the community, for coming for the justice walks. Any mom and friend, any sister, would want justice for their loved one.”

Any mom and friend, any sister, would want justice for their loved one.– Emily Kalujak, Kadin Savikataaq’s friend

Now, even though a year and a half has passed since her disappearance, there are still signs and posters throughout Arviat calling for “Justice for Kadin.”

Kadin’s family is offering a $30,000 reward for any information that could help solve her disappearance.

Siuqpaat Copland says they’ll never give up searching for her daughter. 

“We’re not doing this just for ourselves,” Copland said through tears, adding that it’s hard watching her other children suffer not knowing what happened to Kadin.

“They’re longing for a closure. So that, I think, that’s what keeps us going.”

A woman with short, red hair wears sunglasses on her head and a dark blue parka with black fur trim as she stands in the snow and squints into the sun.
Siuqpaat Copland has been leading the fight to get answers about what happened to her daughter, Kadin. She says she’ll never give up trying to find her. (Juanita Taylor/CBC)